Reminds me of when I was in Year 11 in 1976 and one weekend there was an eclipse of the sun. There were warnings not to look at it and to make a pin-hole camera by putting a hole in a sheet of paper, holding it up and looking at the image on the wall.

On Monday morning our science teacher told us that when it was over his kids said “The eclipse is over, can we look at the sun now?”

What I think is blatantly obvious, other people seem to regard as a theory to be tested.
Frankly, I’m in favour of removing all warning notices on everyday items so that natural selection can run unimpeded through the populace.

I’ve never had the chance to look at the Sun through a properly filtered telescope. Driving to work one morning with a layer of high fog along the Monaro, I noted that the Sun was dulled so much by the fog and edge tint on the windscreen that I could look at it. It was no brighter than a 40 watt frosted bulb. I could see three sunspots clearly on it. A few days later I found some photos online of exactly the same thing.

Time to check if the welding mask is at least a shade 14…

That would be a hypothesis to be tested, no? Given that a theory has already been tested repeatedly and shown to be correct. Like the theory of human-accelerated global warming. Or evolution. :-p

But yes, it is indeed concerning that we seem to be defeating the aforesaid theory of evolution by devised ever-more effective measures to ensure survival of the not fittest…

Back OT, I neglected to mention that if you get any of those eclipse glasses or the telescope filter, it’s easy to damage them, and even a pinprick scratch is dangerous when magnified through a scope. It’s really important to keep them carefully wrapped in something soft and to check them before use by holding them up to the sun but away from your face and looking for tell-tale light shining through.

And on things to see Breda, there ws a brilliant pass of the International Space Station this morning 6-7 minutes and very bright. A couple more coming up:

This second one should be OK for taking a time-lapse photo as the sky will still be dark-ish. But you’ll need to be shooting as it goes away from you to the west rather than as it comes towards as the eastern sky might be too light for a long exposure. There are some good night passes coming in about a week that will be better – like these ones.

To take these you need a wider angle lens rather than telephoto, a tripod and a cable release. Set the camera on bulb and aperture to very small so the picture doesn’t get overwhelmed with ambient light. In the shots above I included some landscape for a frame of reference, plus Mars and Regulus.

Maybe it’s just me, but I can’t look at the sun without a telescope, so I find it astounding that people need to be told not to look at the sun with telescopes. It just seems blatantly obvious, like warning people that lying on railroad tracks will eventually result in being sliced into pieces by a train.

What I think is blatantly obvious, other people seem to regard as a theory to be tested.
Frankly, I’m in favour of removing all warning notices on everyday items so that natural selection can run unimpeded through the populace.

I’ve never had the chance to look at the Sun through a properly filtered telescope. Driving to work one morning with a layer of high fog along the Monaro, I noted that the Sun was dulled so much by the fog and edge tint on the windscreen that I could look at it. It was no brighter than a 40 watt frosted bulb. I could see three sunspots clearly on it. A few days later I found some photos online of exactly the same thing.

But another warning: people do dumb things around telescopes, and kids also bump things. If you do make a solar filter, you should securely tape it to your scope before use. It’s the only way to be certain a tragic accident won’t happen.

breda said :

Thanks, and I wish you would run a regular feature on things to see in the Canberra skies. Maybe the local stargazers could provide input? There are lots of us amateur skywatchers out there who would enjoy a regular heads-up on what there is to see up above.

And make sure you book August 6 as a day off so you can go out to Tidbinbilla for the Mars Curiosity landing. It will be during the daytime locally. There won’t be a specialised Tweetup like we attended for the launch day. But we’ve been talking with Glen Nagle and co from CSIRO, and it will be a pretty special day out there with live feeds as the signals come into Canberra first. But it will be a radio blackout zone, with all public announcements to be via NASA at JPL.

Maybe it’s just me, but I can’t look at the sun without a telescope, so I find it astounding that people need to be told not to look at the sun with telescopes. It just seems blatantly obvious, like warning people that lying on railroad tracks will eventually result in being sliced into pieces by a train.

Thanks, and I wish you would run a regular feature on things to see in the Canberra skies. Maybe the local stargazers could provide input? There are lots of us amateur skywatchers out there who would enjoy a regular heads-up on what there is to see up above.

Amendments to give renters more rights have passed the Legislative Assembly. It will be easier for renters to keep a pet, make minor modifications to their rental property, and to break a lease without incurring significant costs https://t.co/UG9YEv9ilQ(8 hours ago)